822 
Dreyer (Prof. Georges) and Dr. E. W. 
‘A. WALKER on the effect of altitude 
on the blood, 675. 
DuckwortH (Dr. W. H. L.) on the 
organisation of anthropometric investi- 
gation in the British Isles, 230. 
on the excavation on a prehistoric 
site at Bishop’s Stortford, 236. 
on paleolithtc sites in the West of 
England, 237. 
Ductless glands, report on the, 259. 
DurFiELD (Dr. F. A.) on calorimetric 
observations on man, 262. 
Durrretp (Dr. W. G.) on establishing a 
solar observatory in Australia, 132. 
*Dung, the value conferred on, by cake 
feeding, by A. D. Hall, 769. 
*Dunwoopy (R. B.), inland waterways 
in England, 577. 
Dura Den, the upper old red sandstone | 
of, preliminary report on, 150. 
DourxHam (Frank R.), the waterways of 
France, Belgium, and Germany, 577. | 
Dott (P. K.) and J. B. ConEn, the pro- 
gressive bromination of toluene, 424. 
DweErRRyvHOvSE (Dr. A. R.) on the erratic 
blocks of the British Isles, 145. 
on the preparation of a list of 
characteristic fossils, 150. 
Dynamic isomerism, report on, 141. 
Dynamics of a globular stellar system, | 
the, by Prof. A. 8. Eddington, 388. 
Dyson (F. W.) on seismological investiga- 
tions, 45. 
Early bronze age, the, in the lower 
Rhone valley, by H. J. E. Peake, 649. 
Earthquakes, large, the distribution of, 
in space and time, by Rev. H. V. Gill, 
397. 
Ecouzs (Dr. W. H.) on radtotelegraphic 
investigations, 131. 
tween electrical conductors, 401. 
* atmospheric refraction and ab- 
sorption as affecting transmission in | 
wireless telegraphy, 607. 
Economic order, the, by Prof. J. H. 
Muirhead, 581. 
Economic Science and Statistics, Address 
to the Section of, by Rev. P. H. Wick- 
steed, 560. 
*Kconomic value of foodstuffs, the, by 
Prof. L. Hill, 580. 
*Economics, the psychological founda- 
tion of, by Rev. P. H. Wicksteed, 
688. 
Epprveron (Prof. A. S.), the dynamics of 
a globular stellar system, 388. 
Eprivaz-Green (Dr. F. W.) on colour 
vision and colour blindness, 258. 
Education, the mental and phystcal factora 
involved in, report on, 302. 
some experiments in contacts be- | 
| Electromagnetic 
| 
INDEX. 
Education Act, 1902, the working of the, 
ts by Sir H. G. Fordham, 756. 
Educational research, by Dr. C. W. 
Kimmins, 745. : 
Educational Section, Address by Princi- 
pal E. H. Griffiths to the, 722. 
Educational use of museums, the, dis- 
cussion, 743. 
by Dr. J. A. Clubb, 743. 
Eelworms, parasitic and other, G. E. 
Johnson on, 526. 
Eaaar (W. D.) on the influence of school- 
books upon eyesight, 268. 
on the curricula and educational 
organisation of industrial and poor-law 
schools, 301. 
Egyptian skeletons, early, 
W. M. Flinders Petrie, 640. 
*HHRHARDT (H.), decomposition products 
of indigo in the vat, 427. 
*Electric arc, the, as a standard of light, 
by J. F. Forrest, 401. 
*Electric cooking, heating, and lighting, 
domestic, by Prof. J. T. Morris, 602. 
Electrical conductivities of sodium amal- 
gams, the, by E. Vanstone, 428. 
Electrical conductivity of metals, the 
expression for the, as deduced from 
the electron theory, by Dr. W. F. G. 
Swann, 388. 
Electrical conductors through glass, a 
new method of sealing, by M. J. 
Anderson, 405. 
contacts between, some experi- 
ments in, by Dr. W. H. Eccles, 401. 
Electrical measurements, experimcnts for 
improving the construction of practical 
standards for use in, report on, 133. 
Electrical resistance of thin metallic 
films, Dr. W. F. G. Swann on the, 375. 
*Electromagnetic theory of the origin 
of series spectra, an, by Prof. A. W. 
Conway, 399. 
by Prof. 
waves employed in 
radiotelegraphy, the, and the mode of 
their propagation, by Prof. G. W. O. 
Howe, 607. 
Hlectromotive phenomena in plants, report 
on, 241. 
Etxzs (Dr. Gertrude L.), the relation of 
the Rhiwlas and Bala limestones at 
Bala, North Wales, 485. 
the shelly and graptolitic faunas 
of the British ordovician, 490. 
Extison (Dr. F. O’B.) on electromotive 
phenomena in plants, 241. 
Embryonic heart, living cultures of the, 
shown by the micro-kinematograph, 
by Prof. H. Braus, 527. 
*E motions, the relation of the, to motor 
discharge, by Prof. G. J Stokes, 689. 
Engineering Section, Address by Prof. 
Gisbert Kapp to the, 587. 
